InDesign frames may contain either text or graphics. As you work with frames, you’ll notice that InDesign provides a great amount of flexibility and control over your design. This chapter introduces you to working with frames in InDesign.

This chapter is from the book

This chapter is from the book

InDesign frames may contain either text or graphics. As you work with frames, you’ll notice that InDesign provides a great
amount of flexibility and control over your design.

In this introduction to working with frames, you’ll learn how to do the following:

Use the Selection and Direct Selection tools to modify frames.

Resize and reshape text and graphics frames.

Distinguish between bounding boxes and their frames.

Crop a graphic.

Scale an image contained in a graphics frame.

Move a graphic within its frame.

Convert a graphics frame to a text frame.

Wrap text around an object.

Create and rotate a polygon frame.

Align graphic objects to each other.

Center and scale an object within a frame.

Getting started

In this lesson, you’ll work on a two-page article for a magazine about origami, the Japanese art of paper folding. Before
you begin, you’ll need to restore the default preferences for Adobe InDesign to ensure that the tools and palettes function
exactly as described in this lesson. Then you’ll open the finished document for this lesson to see what you’ll be creating.

Delete or deactivate (by renaming) the InDesign Defaults file and the InDesign SavedData file, as described in “Restoring default preferences” on page 2.

Start Adobe InDesign. To begin working, you’ll open an InDesign document that is already partially completed.

Choose File > Open, and open the 03_a.indd file in the Lesson_03 folder, located inside the Lessons folder within the InDesignCIB
folder on your hard disk. If you receive Profile or Policy Mismatch warnings for the RGB and CMYK color profiles, click OK. This will convert to your color settings. Read more about color in Lesson 6, “Working with Color.”

Note

If you have not already copied the resource files for this lesson onto your hard disk from the Lesson_03 folder from the Adobe
InDesign CS2 Classroom in a Book CD, do so now. See “Copying the Classroom in a Book files” on page 4.

Choose File > Save As, rename the file 03_frames.indd, and save it in the Lesson_03 folder.

To see what the finished document will look like, open the 03_b.indd file in the same folder. You can leave this document
open to act as a guide as you work. When you’re ready to resume working on the lesson document, choose Window > 03_frames.indd.